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Word: crimeeds (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...should liken Ivan Boesky with the gangsters who fix the crap games. Both seem to have a knack for reducing the imposed sentence, if not escaping its very intent. Furthermore, with both types of crime the victim is unaware of being--a victim...

Author: By William H. Berkman, | Title: Getting Away With Murder | 11/26/1986 | See Source »

Houlihan supervised a group of older students at the Institute who recently completed interviews with 103 of the neighborhoods' 1700 elderly residents. He said the study found that many older residents fear crime and loneliness, and often must leave their homes because they are "house-rich and cash-poor...

Author: By Martha A. Bridegam, | Title: Study Shows Plight of Elderly | 11/25/1986 | See Source »

...unsurpassed as the original James Bond, but Sean Connery had his hands full playing Malone, the broguish cop in The Untouchables, which finished shooting last week in Chicago. "It's pretty cumbersome," says Connery of the tommy gun, one of the weapons he carries when he teams up with Crime Buster Eliot Ness, played by Kevin Costner (Silverado). But the tommy gun is one of the few things the Brian De Palma movie has in common with the vintage TV series, which ran from 1959 to 1963 and featured a jailed Al Capone. In the film, for example, Capone, played...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Nov. 24, 1986 | 11/24/1986 | See Source »

...future world in which Lantry finds himself is, unsurprisingly, an anti-utopia; crime is unknown, death is not feared and Ray Bradbury books have all been burned. Well, maybe not such an anti-utopia after all. But Lantry just can't seem to enjoy himself. Apparently he disapproves of the unquestioning happiness of the amazingly well-adjusted people he meets. So he kills them...

Author: By Jeffrey J. Wise, | Title: Schizophrenic Futurism | 11/21/1986 | See Source »

...Hung spent a year in his college's detention center before he was sent to a prison camp. "It was like they turned Adams House into a jail. They put me in a dark room, asked me to write down my faults, my crime," he says...

Author: By Allison L. Jernow, | Title: The Fine Arts of Calligraphy and Counterrevolution | 11/20/1986 | See Source »

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